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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: © The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PLoS One 9 (2014): e93296, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0093296.
    Description: Direct and indirect human impacts on coastal ecosystems have increased over the last several centuries, leading to unprecedented degradation of coastal habitats and loss of ecological services. Here we document a two-century temporal disparity between salt marsh accretion and subsequent loss to indirect human impacts. Field surveys, manipulative experiments and GIS analyses reveal that crab burrowing weakens the marsh peat base and facilitates further burrowing, leading to bank calving, disruption of marsh accretion, and a loss of over two centuries of sequestered carbon from the marsh edge in only three decades. Analogous temporal disparities exist in other systems and are a largely unrecognized obstacle in attaining sustainable ecosystem services in an increasingly human impacted world. In light of the growing threat of indirect impacts worldwide and despite uncertainties in the fate of lost carbon, we suggest that estimates of carbon emissions based only on direct human impacts may significantly underestimate total anthropogenic carbon emissions.
    Description: This research was made possible by a grant from the National Science Foundation Biological Oceanography Program and the Brown University Undergraduate Teaching and Research Award Program.
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/postscript
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  • 12
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    Ecological Society of America
    In:  Ecology, 65 (2). pp. 370-381.
    Publication Date: 2019-09-17
    Description: Experimental removal of the introduced herbivorous snail Littorina littorea from a protected New England rocky beach resulted in rapid habitat and community changes. At normal snail densities, L. littorea grazing bulldozes sediments from hard substrate and precludes the presence of an algal canopy. Snail removal resulted in rapid sediment accumulation and the development of an algal canopy, which accelerated sedimentation and bound sediment to hard substrate. These changes led to the increased success of organisms characteristic of soft—sediment habitats, such as polychaetes, tubiculous amphipods, mud crabs, and mud snails, and decreased success of organisms characteristic of hard—substrate habitats, such as barnacles and encrusting algae. Snail removal also significantly influenced the success of the marsh grass Spartina alterniflora. L. littorea consumes the shoots and rhizomes of marsh grass, as well as mediating sediment accumulation, which is necessary for vegetative expansion of root mat. Removal of L. littorea resulted in expansion of the littoral area dominated by S. alterniflora, as well as increased productivity of the marsh grass. These results suggest that the North American invasion of the European periwinkle has altered habitats and communities in protected littoral waters. Prior to the introduction of L. littorea, soft—bottomed littoral habitats and fringing salt marsh environments may have been more common that they are presently. Herbivorous snails in general may have an important habitat—modifying effect in protected marine communities that has not been appreciated previously.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 13
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    University of Chicago Press
    In:  The American Naturalist, 117 (5). pp. 754-773.
    Publication Date: 2017-04-20
    Description: The reproductive ecology of three sympatric hermit crab species from the Bay of Panama is examined. All three species reveal patterns of size and reproduction mediated by their supply of shells. Shells are demonstrated to be in limited supply. Crabs with shells large enough to allow growth, put effort into growth at the expense of reducing reproductive expenditures, while crabs in shells too small to permit growth allocate more time and effort into immediate reproductive gains. This resource regulated trade-off between growth and reproduction gives these tropical crabs plasticity in important life-history traits. Crabs with a relatively poor supply of shells reproduce at smaller sizes, reproduce more frequently, have larger clutches, and are unable to reach the larger sizes of crabs with a less limiting supply of shells. This flexibility in life-history traits allows these crabs to tailor their reproductive schedules to resource supplies controlled by gastropod mortality, as well as the presence of competitors and predators.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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